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News Review of Current
Events the World Over
Roosevelt Calls on All Nations to Ban War and Disarm
Hitler Approves, Provided Germany’s Equality
Demand Is Granted.
By EDWARD W. PICKARD
PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT'S ringing
T call to all the civilized world to
unite in outlawing war. in abandoning
its of offense and in agreeing
Chancellor
Hitler
of international policy, the reaction to
Mr. Roosevelt’s message was awaited
with intense interest. Everywhere it
was considered that he was directing
his admonitions especially toward Ger¬
many and for twenty-four hours the
absorbing question was "What will
Hitler reply?”
The German chancellor had sum¬
moned the almost obsolete reichstag
to hear the speech he had prepared in
seclusion, and when he delivered it, it
was found that he indorsed President
Roosevelt’s plan for a non-aggression
pact and agreed to join it. At the
same time, in ringing tones, he reiter¬
ated Germany’s claim to equal arma¬
ment and refused to adhere to a dis¬
armament agreement, even If it were
reached by a majority of nations, un¬
less this demand for equality is fully
recognized. Otherwise, he declared.
Germany will withdraw from the
League of Nations.
The chancellor agreed with Roose¬
velt that lasting economic reconstruc¬
tion is impossible unless the armament
question is settled, arid accepted the
MacDonald plan, indorsed by Roose¬
velt, as a basis for disarmament, but
insisted any new defense system must
be identical for Germany and the
other nations. He promised to dis¬
band the German auxiliary police and
also to subject semimilitary organiza¬
tions to international control, provided
other nations accept the same control.
Hitler declared his nation had suf¬
fered too much from the insanity of
war to visit the same upon others, and
denied that Germany contemplated in¬
vasion of either France or Poland. He
demanded revision of the Versailles
treaty, asserting that Germany had
fulfilled the "unreasonable demands”
of that treaty with "suicidal loyalty.”
Officials of the State department in
Washington said Hitler’s speech was
encouragingly conciliatory. In France
it was not so well received. The
French government was rather cool
toward the Roosevelt proposals, and
the fear was entertained in Paris that
Hitler’s approval of them would isolate
France.
fN HIS special message to congress
1 accompanying a copy of his dis¬
patch to the nations. President Roose¬
velt thus summarized the peace plan
that he had proposed for the world:
“First, that through
a series of steps the
weapons of offensive
warfare be eliminat¬
ed.
“Second, that the
first definite step be
taken now.
“Third, that while
these steps are being
taken no nation shall
increase existing arm
aments over and
above the limitations
of treaty obligations.
subject to existing
treaty rights no nation during the dis¬
armament period shall send any armed
force of whatsoever nature across its
own borders.”
To the correspondents he said he
had consulted no other governments
concerning his project, and had con¬
fided the plan only to Secretary of
State Hull.
The cablegram was a complete sur¬
prise to the chancelleries of the world,
and the President’s direct method of
approach rather stunned some of them,
especially the Japanese. The emperor
of Japan, it was explained in the
Tokyo foreign office, “never speaks
with foreign nations on political mat¬
ters and the foreign office cannot
comment on communications to the
emperor.”
Prime Minister MacDonald, speak¬
ing at a dinner of the Pilgrims’ so¬
ciety in London, praised the Roose¬
velt plan almost extravagantly, rejoic¬
ing that “henceforth America, by her
own declaration, is to be indifferent
to nothing that concerns the peace of
the world.”
In Italy, the Balkans and Mexico,
as well as elsewhere, Mr. Roosevelt’s
proposals were received with warm
approval, and Norway’s cabinet was
quick to be the first to accept them
formally. Russia felt that the mes¬
sage might be the first step toward
recognition of the Soviet government
by the United States, so Moscow was
pleased with it.
Opinion in the United States, as re¬
flected in editorials In newspapers of
all parts of the country, was that the
not to send armed
forces across national
borders groused the
peoples of the earth
to enthusiastic ap¬
proval, and mny well
prove to be the great¬
est act of his regime.
Coming as it did when
Europe was on edge
with rumors of com¬
ing wars and when
Chancellor Adolf Hit¬
ler was about to make
his first declaration
President
Roosevelt
President had made a bold and timely
move to save the world from warfare,
and that It had a chance to succeed;
but there was some fear that he was
trying to extend the Monroe Doctrine
over all continents, and some doubt
as to what his future course would
be if his proposals were rejected.
Generally, the President was highly
commended for his energetic and en¬
lightened action.
T TNLESS Japan yields to the peace
U* pleas of President Roosevelt and
others—which is unlikely—the Chi¬
nese may burn both Peiping and Tient¬
sin to prevent their use as bases by
the Invaders. Late dispatches from
Shanghai said the defenders, already
driven back to a point only a few
miles north of the old capital, had
planned to destroy both cities if they
could not hold them. All the Chinese
banks in Peiping had transferred their
specie reserves to Shanghai, and Brit¬
ish mining operations north of Tient¬
sin had been stopped. Thousands of
families had been evacuated from
Peiping in the belief that a Japanese
air attack would soon be made.
The navy office in Tokyo announced
that the 1933 grand maneuvers of the
navy would be held in “seas south of
Japan,” beginning early in June. Ad¬
miral Mineo Osumi, naval minister,
explained that “there is nothing sig¬
nificant” in the fact that the maneuv¬
ers are being held in waters south of
Japan. “Such a big event cannot be
staged on the sea of Japan owing to
the lack of space,” he said.
jD USSIA’S new alignment with
China was endangered by the
Soviet proposal to sell the Chinese
Eastern railway of Manchuria to Ja¬
pan. The Chinese were enraged by
this plan and called off the negotia¬
tions for a trade treaty with Moscow,
Chinese papers claim that China is
likely to retaliate against Russia with
a boycott on Soviet oil, which has
made serious inroads on the Chinese
market in the last two years.
PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT’S big
U public works-industrial regulation
bill finally was completed by his ad¬
visers and submitted to It
provides for a $3,300,
000,000 construction
program with which
it is hoped depression
will be routed and the
industries of the na¬
tion put on their feet.
How this immense
sum will be raised
was left to the ways
and means committee
of the house to de¬
cide. Mr. Roosevelt
conferred with Lewis Douglas
W. Douglas, director of the budget,
and thereafter it was made plain that
the plan to finance the program by the
Issue of greenbacks was abandoned,
though Senator Glass, wisest financier
in the Democratic party, had said he
preferred that, to any form of taxa¬
tion, despite his general opposition to
inflation. The President was informed
that congress would not stand for a
sales tax to provide the $220,000,000
required during the first year for In¬
terest and amortization charges.
The bill, as drafted by Director
Douglas and others, would authorize
the following construction works:
1. Public highways—$400,000,000, of
which $250,000,000 would follow the
present allocation and $150,000,000
would be for extensions.
2. Public buildings—No set limit.
3 . Naval construction—$100,000,000
maximum.
4 . Army, including equipment and
possibly a huge airplane flotilla should
the disarmament conference fail—
$100,000,000 maximum.
5. Slums and housing following the
pattern of the United States Housing
corporation of war days—No set limit.
6. Natural resources, Including soil
and erosion work, forestry and similar
projects—No set limit.
7. Loans to railroads for mainte¬
nance and equipment—No limit.
* pUINCETON into deep mourning university by was the thrown death
of Dr. John Grier Hibben, president
emeritus, who was killed at Wood¬
ridge, N. .7., when his automobile col¬
lided with a truck. Mrs. Hibben. who
accompanied him, was severely In¬
jured. Doctor Hibben, who was born
in Peoria, 111., in 1861, was educated
at Princeton and the University of
Berlin. He succeeded Woodrow Wil¬
son as president of Princeton in 1912
and retired in June last year. He
ranked high as an educator and as
author of works on philosophy.
* PRESIDENT Rufus C. Dawes, ROOSEVELT president noticed of the
Century of Progress, that he would be
unable to go to Chicago to open that
great exposition on May 27. He added
that he hoped to attend the fair be¬
fore it closes. Notwithstanding this
disappointment, the exposition will be
formally opened on the date named
above, and the intensive activity on
the grounds gave assurance that it
would be practically completed and
ready for visitors at that time.
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'T'HREE members of the American
A delegation to the world economic
conference in London have been select¬
ed by President Roosevelt, They are
Secretary of State Hull, chairman;
Janies M. Cox of Ohio, once Demo¬
cratic candidate for the Presidency,
and Senator Key Pittman.
QITTING for the eleventh as a court time of In Impeachment Its history,
the senate began the trial of Federal
Harold Louderback of the
Judge
.Louderback
judiciary committee. The proceedings
took up the day sessions of the sen¬
ate and It was believed the trial would
end by May 27.
Judge Louderback is standing trial
on five articles of Impeachment
charging him with irregularities in
receivership cases. It is alleged that
he displayed favoritism in appointing
receivers, that he appointed incompe¬
tent persons, and ordered them paid
exorbitant fees.
One article claims that he appointed
a telegraph operator as receiver for
a three million dollar motor company;
another that he forced an expert re¬
ceiver out of office because the re¬
ceiver would not comply with his or¬
ders to select a particular attorney.
C'XECUTIVES representing twenty
*- a nine of the leading life Insurance
companies that hold farm mortgages
called on Henry Morgenthau, Jr., in
Washington and told that chairman
of the farm board that, while they
were desirous of helping in the suc¬
cessful administration of the emer¬
gency farm mortgage act, they were
opposed to any general writing down
of mortgages or their wholesale ex¬
change for federal land bank bonds
under the terms of the emergency leg¬
islation.
For refinancing the outstanding
farm mortgages the land banks under
the direction of the new farm credit
administration are authorized to issue
up to $2,000,000,000 of bonds which
may be sold or exchanged for mort¬
gages held by the insurance com¬
panies and others. Loans on or ex¬
changes of bonds for these securities
fna.v not exceed 50 per cent of the
“appraised normal value” of land
mortgaged plus 20 per cent of the in¬
sured Improvements, however, and Mr.
Morgenthau recently said that “in or¬
der to effect an exchange of first mort¬
gages for bonds it is anticipated that
in many cases the amount of such
mortgages will have to be curtailed
to come within the sum which can be
loaned.”
It was the consensus of the execu¬
tives that most of their mortgages
had been conservatively written and
that in justice to their policyholders
they should not make additional sacri¬
fices of assets to losses sustained dur¬
ing the last four years. The opinion
prevailed that the companies should
continue to carry their farm mortgage
holdings pending a return of increased
land values to come with the general
prosperity which they felt was not
far off. Meanwhile the companies
would continue avoiding foreclosures
wherever possible and decide indi¬
vidual cases on their own merits.
COME time ago the senate called on
^ the secretary of agriculture for in¬
formation concerning grain speculating
on boards of trade. Mr.
reported in response,
and he says that big
speculators in wheat
futures in the grain
pit were short “on an
average five days out
of every six” from
April 1, 1930, to Octo¬
ber 22, 1932.
In his report, Wal¬
lace declined to give
the names of persons
and firms short 1,000,
000 bushels or more
during the last “two or three years”
on the Chicago Board of Trade, as
asked by the senate. He explained
the grain futures trading laws pro¬
hibited release of this information.
A total of 7G9 trading days covered
in his report. Wallace said, showed
“the big speculators, as a group, were
predominantly on the short side of
the wheat futures market.
"As a group, their net position as
of the close of the market each day
was short on 643 days, or 83.6 per
cent of the time, and long on 125
days, or 16.4 per cent of the time, and
one day evenly balanced,” Wallace re¬
ported.
President Peter B. Carey of the
Chicago Board of Trade said the in¬
formation presented to the senate is
“simply a repetition of data assem¬
bled by Dr. J. W. T. Duvel, chief of
the grain futures administration, in
an effort to retain bis bureaucratic
job.”
A IR laws for the world are being
4A drafted at an international con¬
ference on aerial legislation now in
session in Rome. The rules adopted
will be embodied in an International
agreement and will be applicable in
ail adhering countries. The delega¬
tion from the United States is headed
by John C. Cooper. Jr., chairman of
the committee on aeronautics of the
American Bar association.
©. 1933, Western Newspaper Union.
CLEVELAND COURIER
northern district of
California. Vice Pres¬
ident Garner was
president of the court
and Henry F. Ashurst
of Arizona, chairman
of the judiciary com¬
mittee, served as mas¬
ter of procedure. The
opening statement for
the prosecution was
made by Represefita
tive Hatton W. Sum¬
ners of Texas, chair¬
man of the house
Sec’y Wallace
GEORGIA
NEWS
Happenings Over
the State
Amid a cheering throng estimated
at 5,000, Old Man Depression was forr
mally hanged and buried in Dalton
recently.
F. Q. Sammons, state senator of
Lawrenceville, was elected president
of the Georgia Funeral Directors' As¬
sociation in Macon recently.
The first shipments of Ware coun¬
ty cucumbers to the eastern markets
has moved from Waycross. From now
on cukes will go forward steadily.
Officials of the Flint River cot¬
ton mills in Albany announced re¬
cently that double shifts of workers
will soon be employed to fill increas¬
ing orders.
Eastern, northren and New Eng¬
land railroad lines have blocked the
effort of Georgia peach growers to
obtain freight rate reductions for this
year’s crop. •
Thomas A. Hooper, Dalton cotton
buyer, has assumed his duties as head
of the Dalton postoffice. He succeeds
Mrs. J. A. Crawford. He was rec¬
ommended by Congressman M. C. Tar¬
ver.
Proposals for dredging a nine-foot
channel in the Savannah river be¬
tween Savannah and Augusta met an
unfavorable report by the United
States engineers of the South Atlantic
division.
Between - 500 and 1,000 additional
workers have been given employ¬
ment In Columbus textile plants with¬
in the past few days due to the up¬
swing in business conditions through¬
out the country.
For the first time since its capac¬
ity was tripled in 1929, the 80,000
spindie textile plant of the B. F.
Goodrich Rubber company, Thomas
ton, is operating at full capacity on
a 144-hour week basis.
Representative Charles H. Brand,
72, ranking democrat on the house
banking committee and a member of
the national house since 1917, died
at his residence in Athens the other
day after an illness of several months.
The Crawford W. Long memorial
medal has been awarded to Dr. Lom¬
bard Kelly, professor of anatomy at
tile University of Georgia medical
school at Augusta, in recognition of
his research work during the past
year.
Governor Eugene Talmadge, acting
in co-operation with the board of con¬
trol, has moved to provide quarters
at the Miledgeville state hospital for
insane patients now confined in the
various jails of the state.
Immediate action to prevent an out¬
break of malaria in Waycross is be¬
ing advocated by the civic clubs of
that city, following a general confer¬
ence called by the Women’s Health
club, which recently sponsored clean¬
up week.
J. W. Barnett, chairman of the state
highway board, told the Georgia coun¬
ty commissioners at the opening ses¬
sion of their annual convention in
Albany that revenue for highway work
this year would be half of what it
was in 1932.
Mrs. W. F. Little has named a new
rose grown in her gardens in Mil
ledgeville the “Nellie Hines Rose’’
in honor of Mrs. Nellie Womack Hines,
president of the MiUedgeville Garden
Club and prominent writer, musician
and club woman.
Industrial conditions in Americas
and Sumter county are now better
than during a number of years past,
with unemployment rapidly disappear¬
ing and many new projects involving
expenditures amounting to thousands
of dollars under way.
Thirty-five hundred civitan conser¬
vation corps recruits are expected to
be added shortly to the 637 already in
camp at Fort Benning. Georgia, Flor¬
ida and Alabama will furnish 1,000
each of the new men and 500 will
be sent from South Carolina.
Quimby Melton, editor of the Griffin
Daily News, was recently nominated
for national executive committeeman
of the American Legion from Georgia.
The Chatham Post (Savannah) placed
his name in nomination. His name
will be presented at the state con¬
vention to be held in Valdosta In
June.
Concrete offers of government as¬
sistance in solving some of the in¬
dustrial and unemployment problems
that have helped to retard business
recovery in Georgia are set forth in
the great $3,300,000,000 public works
industrial control program which the
president recently submitted to con¬
gress.
The new state school textbooks are
to be put into use as they are need¬
ed, beginning with the fall term, but
no old books are to be thrown away,
and every possible effort will be made
to relieve the financial strain on
the taxpayers.
Atlanta and Fulton county will be
ready to launch an organized and de¬
termined effort to obtain their share
of the $3,300,000,000 public works
industrial control fund as soon as
President Roosevelt’s program is en¬
acted into law.
PRESIDENT PLEADS
FOR WORLD PEACE
Message of Warning Sent to
54 Other Nations.
Washington. — President Roosevelt
asked the world to give up offensive
weapons of war and unite for peace
and economic recovery.
In n message immediately inter¬
preted ou Capitol hill as constituting
particularly plain speaking to Ger¬
many, the President admonished all
foreign potentates to give up “petty”
national aims, or the civilized world
■would know where to place the blame.
Dispatched unheralded to 54 for¬
eign capitals just on the eve of Adolf
Hitler's expected pronouncement of
German policy, the message was a
diplomatic sensation of first magni¬
tude.
It proposed that no armed troops
whatsoever should hereafter cross any
frontier save when a neighbor has of¬
fended by breaking her armament
agreements.
It backed the MacDonald proposal
for a consultative pact tor security,
■which the United States heretofore
had shunned and which France much
desires, but it also proposed that all
nations hol(l armament within treaty
limits, whicli France has been ac¬
cused of failing to do.
It mentions no names, but de¬
nounced foreign Invasion at a time
when the Japanese advance in China
is in full swing.
For the United States, the plain
words of the declaration point to ab¬
stention from further incursions by
American marines into any Latin
Amerlcan country. They hint at a
status quo with respect to the Amer¬
ican forces now stationed, by treaty,
in portions of China.
As an immediate goal, the President
asked success for the Geneva arms
conference and the economic confer¬
ence soon to meet in London.
He proposed:
Adoption at Geneva of the MacDon¬
ald plan to reduce the armaments of
France, stabilize those of Germany
and set up a consultative pact to pro¬
mote peace.
Agreements upon the time and place
of a later conference to carry these
steps still further.
An agreement meantime that no na¬
tion shall increase its existing arma¬
ments.
And a promise by all nations, pro
vided the terms of arms limitation are
faithfully kept, “that they will send
no armed force of whatsoever nature
across their frontiers.”’
The message, contrary to long-stand¬
ing diplomatic practice, was addressed
directly to the kings, potentates and
Presidents of all of the 54 nations to
be represented at London, including
Russia. It was signed just “Franklin
D. Roosevelt.”
It went forward in direct language,
without the usual protection of diplo¬
matic code.
Since the President’s admonitions
seemed directed especially toward Ger¬
many, the response of Chancellor Hit¬
ler was eagerly awaited. This came
in the form of an address to the
reichstag and was a qualified accept¬
ance of the Roosevelt plan. Hitler
said Germany would enter a nonag¬
gression pact and would gladly dis¬
arm if all other nations agreed to do
the same, but he Insisted on the Ger¬
man demand for equality of armament
and revision of the treaty of Ver¬
sailles. He said Germany had no wish
to inflict on others the “insanity of
war” and denied that his nation con¬
templated invasion of either France or
Poland. He agreed with Mr. Roose¬
velt that lasting economic reconstruc¬
tion depended on settlement of the
question of disarmament, but refused
to adhere to any arms agreement un¬
less the German demand for equality
were fully recognized. Otherwise, he
said, Germany would withdraw from
the League of Nations.
Most of the nations to which the
Roosevelt message was sent indicated
their full approval of his plan, but
France was rather cool toward It, and
Japan put off any definite reply, inti¬
mating that its course in Manchuria
could not be included. Prime Minister
MacDonald of Great Britain praised
the President’s proposals almost ex¬
travagantly. but the British press and
public seemed to feel that they offered
no real solution of the problems in¬
volved.
Rockefeller Office Site to
Move After Half Century
New York.—The building at 26
Broadway, long known as the “Rocke¬
feller Address,” will lose its most fa¬
mous tenants early in July. John D.
Rockefeller. Sr., John D. Rockefeller,
.Tr„ and their personal staffs will move
to the fifty-sixth floor of the seventy
story RCA building, the main unit in
Rockefeller center. The change will
mark the first, transfer of the Rocke¬
fellers’ business headquarters in half
a century.
File* Over Atlantic Again
Dakar, Senegal.—The big French
airplane Arc-en-Ceil (Rainbow), pi¬
loted by Jean Mermoz, arrived here,
completing the second west-to-east
crossing of the South Atlantic. It
spanned the ocean in 17 hours 10 min¬
utes.
Electrocuted on Wire Fence
Randolph, Vt. — Antone Cardian,
twenty-four, was electrocuted on a
farm here as he grasped a barbed
wire fence which had become charged
from a fallen wire.
Stainless Steel Teeth
Is Latest Dental Idea
Some people carry little gold
mines in their mouths. Now that
gold has reached n prohibitive price,
however, dentists have been seekint!
some inventive genius who could find
or make a reliable substitute. Gold
was used because of Its malleable,
rustless, and practically indestructi¬
ble qualities, and to find another
metal with these characteristic*
seemed a forlorn hope, notes a writ¬
er In London Tit-Bits.
Necessity has again mothered In¬
vention, and a British inventor has
designed nn electric welder which
makes stainless steel lie down and
behave itself, just as easily and read¬
ily as gold. Steel dentures are now
the fashion, and are better, cheaper,
and stronger than gold.
The dental mechanic takes an in¬
geniously designed pair of pliers,
holds the parts to be welded between
the electrodes of the pilers, turns on
the juice, and electricity does the
trick to perfection. Thus the prob¬
lem of making a hard metal act like
a soft one is solved, and in future
your teeth should cost less and last
longer.
WOMAN’S WEAKNESS
*'
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I soon noticed a wonderful change — more
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Write Dr. Pierce’* Clinic, Buffalo, N.
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DAISY FLY KILLER
SORE EYES feTSS
relieves and cures soi
'sxffljgsfiw&sss:
Worms expelled promptly from the human
Shot.” One single All Druggists. dose does *thtftrick.^50c!
DrPeery’s
ymirfsmn m
_ Vermifuge
Wrights Pill Co.. 100 gold Street, N. Y. City
BE BEAUTIFUL ---------- — without "Jtiioui the me aid aid ot ot
priced , preparations. We tell
P"t,, c ° mpIe ‘f secret Instruction’s you how
making and
Box 482 ^Send 25 c In ,
Patchogue, N.
CASH IN
Depression Life and Accident Policit
No Medical Examination Required. Am
1 to 80. $1,000.00 benefit—$1.00 a mont
plan. Salesmen keep all of the first mone
$6.00 and a bonus to producers. Fr<
sales plan. Write G AN N E T
jlSMch^TOBjdg. . Salt Lake City. Ufa
WNU—7 21—33
T\ 1V1 If ANY women
both young and
middle - aged suffer
from periodic back pains
in side or —
from catarrhal
drains — from nerv¬
ousness, or “heat
/ flashes,” they should
take Dr. Pierce’s Fa-